Theresa May arrives Nigeria tomorrow
28/08/2018British Prime Minister Theresa May will arrive Abuja tomorrow as part of a three-nation African tour. She will fly into the federal capital from South Africa and move to Lagos.
- 0
British Prime Minister Theresa May will arrive Abuja tomorrow as part of a three-nation African tour. She will fly into the federal capital from South Africa and move to Lagos.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi held a meeting on Monday with his Vietnamese counterpart Tran Dae Kwang at the Ittahadeya Presidential Palace, during which they discussed enhancing bilateral relations between.
Cote d’Ivoire’s President Alassane Ouattara, Sierra Leonean President Julius Maada Bio, Botswana’s President Mokgweetsi Masisi and Burkina Faso’s President Roch Marc Christian Kabore will attend the 2018 Beijing Summit of.
Former President Mr Robert Mugabe yesterday, for the first time, endorsed and congratulated his successor President Mnangagwa on his election victory and sent his daughter, Bona, to represent him at.
The Deputy Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Ms Reginah Mhaule, will represent South Africa in the Singapore-Sub-Saharan High Level Ministerial Exchange, scheduled for on 27 and 28 August 2018.
Theresa May is set to visit Nelson Mandela’s former cell to as she makes her first trip to Africa as Prime Minister. Mrs May jets off from Heathrow today before.
Namibia will hold countrywide land expropriation talks for the first time since independence as the small southern African nation grapples with political and ethnic tensions over the transfer of wealth.
Egyptian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sameh Shokri and Director of General Intelligence Service (GIS) Abass Kamel will head to Ethiopia on Monday to transfer President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s message to.
Rwanda’s Foreign Minister Louise Mushikabo arrived to Beirut on a two-day official visit, during which she will submit a letter stating that she will run for the position of Executive.
Zimbabwe on Sunday inaugurated a president for the second time in nine months as a country recently jubilant over the fall of longtime leader Robert Mugabe is now largely subdued.